SHED | knowing each other as different and the same

Under the bright yellow glow of SHED, time suspends for an alchemy of movement, sound, animate costumes and light.

Featuring a collection of time-based moving portraits, SHED | knowing each other as different and the same holds space for the multiplicity and humanity of bodies of culture[1]. The immersive performance installation invites pause. A slowing down and an enlivening into presence for an otherworldly experience.

  • a seeing
  • a feeling
  • a being with
  • a sensorial unravelling
  • a conjuring of ancestral love and grief
  • a shedding of what holds us from knowing each other as different and the same.

SHED is an invitation to notice the subtle ways our bodies perceive, receive and relate to an “other”. To witness the assumptions and imaginings that consciously and/or unconsciously colour our experience of difference. To remember that every body inhabits an internal life as vivid and complex as our own.

The collection of choreographies by Tzeng includes a duet created and performed with experimental musician FOONYAP, and five solo portraits created for, with and danced by Cindy AnsahCory BeaverKara BullockAlèn Martel and Mpoe Mogale.

Sound, costumes and light manifest as energetic extensions of the body, spirit and land. The design elements of each work emerged from tender and nurturing exchanges with sound designers FOONYAPJiajia LiNum and Darren Young, costume collaborator Alison Yanota, sodium light designer Nicolas Brunet-Beaulieu and lighting designer Jonathan Kim.

Each portrait draws from the intimate and vast inner landscapes of the performers’ embodied values, memories and lived experiences. Each exists as a testimony of the beauty and resilience of bodies of culture.

[1] From Pam: I replace the language and idea of “People of colour” with “Bodies of Culture” as reclamation of the inherent wisdom of the body and the pieces of the experiences of racialized people that have been stolen, stripped away, and invisibilized by white body supremacy. Bodies of Culture comes from my practice in Somatic Abolition guided by the work of author, therapist and racialized trauma specialist Resmaa Menakem.

@pamtzeng

Credits

ideation, choreography

Pam Tzeng

portraits created for and with performers

Cindy Ansah, Cory Beaver, Kara Bullock, Alèn Martel, Mpoe Mogale, Pam Tzeng, FOONYAP

sodium light design

Nicolas Brunet-Beaulieu

lighting design, technical direction

Jonathan Kim

costume design collaboration

Pam Tzeng, Alison Yanota

sound design

FOONYAP, Jiajia Li, NUM (Milad Bagheri Torbehbar and Maryam Sirvan), Darren Young

music mastering

Krzysztof Sujata

poetic invocations

Jordan Baylon

photography

Michael Vincent Tan, Gui Morilha
    SHED | knowing each other as different and the same
    SHED | knowing each other as different and the same
    SHED | knowing each other as different and the same
    SHED | knowing each other as different and the same
    SHED | knowing each other as different and the same
    SHED | knowing each other as different and the same

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